But when there's so much newsprint and so many pixels competing for your attention, "Your favourite albums" just doesn't cut it as a headline, apparently.

These lists have been billed as '20 Albums That Shook the Last 20 Years', or, by the accompanying press release, as nothing less than "The Most Influential Albums Of The Last 20 Years".

On those terms, the lists fall far short. Elephant is wonderful, but world-shaking? Hardly. It's not even the most shaking album The White Stripes released during that time.

We love, love Bob Dylan's Time Out of Mind, but the only thing it really shook is the cobwebs out of Dylan's 'fro. Compare it to Britney's Blackout for example, which made a massive splash at the time, and whose robopop production is stamped on both "credible" and proper pop to this day.

Let England Shake and The Soft Bulletin are both remarkable, but their influence on the last 20 years, musically, socially, culturally, is more than debatable.

We know that Mojo has a reputation for being the middle-aged white rocker mag of choice, and its front covers certainly don't help contradict that notion, but the mag itself is much, much more eclectic (if old-fashioned) than these lists will have you believe.

But the almost-exclusively white, male-led (just Portishead and PJ Harvey over both lists), guitar-heavy angle doesn't do a fair job of reflecting the breadth of the publication, which is a shame.

Hip-hop? Soul? Dance? Proper pop? All music covered (if not front-covered) by Mojo, but with the crossover exception of Kid A and Endtroducing, it simply doesn't exist on these lists.

So, in response Digital Spy have collected our own most 'Albums That Shook the Last 20 Years'. We've decided to just mimic the annual list, restricting ourselves to one album per year.

Just one rule - we've not allowed ourselves to pick an album that features on either of Mojo's own lists, necessarily reducing our own representation of guitar rock.

We're not trying to be more "alternative" than Mojo, or cooler. Far from it. We know how absurdly obvious every album on this list is. That's sort of the point.

We don't expect you to agree with all (or any) of our list, but we hope to look a little wider, and pick out some records that really shook things up in the last 20 years, either though their sheer impact or continued influence.